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Show To The tent Ba, Saxon, renth part th patt alligne t "the maintenance of the miniftry - Many have made witty inveétives againft ufury they fay, thatit is pity the devil fhould have God' Bacon nr¥ which is the ¢ithe "Somgtimes comes the with a tithe pig's tail Tickling the paxfon as he lies afleep Then dreams he of another benefice sithe of a hair was never loft in my houfe before S/.m/'\'.(/})earu Since the firft fivord was drawn about this queftio " Eyry tithe ;'oul 'mongft many thoufand difme ! Hath been as dear a3 Helen. Sbak.Troil. ard Creffida . Small part; fmall portion, unlefs it b mifprinted for zitles fo religio ar to b feldo mixture of civi tithes n GoTiTaE, v. a [TeoBan, Saxon.] BacoT . tax; to levy the tenth part When I come to the tithing of them, I will tirh them one with another, and will rpak; an Irithma the tithingman Speufer on Ireland Bydecimation and a tithed death 1f thy revenges hunger for that foo Which nature loaths, take thou the deftin'd tenth Shake[peare When thou haft made an end of tirbing all th tithesof thine increafe, the third year, the year o ' tithing, give unto the Levite, franger, fatherlefs ~ and widow Deut. xxvi. 12 To pay tithe For lambe, pig, and calf, and for other the like Tithe o as thy cattle the Loxd do not ftrike. Tufir. s Tr'taER, 7 /. [from zithe.] One who ga~ thers tithes Tiruine. 2. [ [tithinga, law Latin from tithe. 1. Tithing is the number or company o ~ ten men with their families knit together in a {ociety, all of them being boun to the king for the peaceable and goo behaviour of each of their fociety : o thefe companies there was one chief perfon vyho, fro hi office wa calle (toothingman) tithingman; but now h 1s nothing but a conftable Coavel Poor Tom, who is whipt from tithing to tit ing clean.sh data import.tsv out README and ftock punithed and imprifoned Shake[peare's King Lear 2, Tithe; tenth part due to the prieft Though vicar be bad, or the parfon be evil Go not for thy tithing thyfelf to the devil Tufir. "I THINGMAN. 7. /. [tithing and man.| Petty peace-officer; an under conftable 1 is hundxr-ed 1s not at his command furthe tha S prince's fervice; and alfo CVery tithingma roa controul him Spenfer 'THYMAL, n, /. [tithymalle, Frenc U'tbjjmallm, Latin.] An herb dinjw OLkl UT,ILLATE ti @, # [#itillo, Lat. "T A{;fi where the breath o lif arge of fnuff the wily virgii‘;h s T gnomes dire'& to ev'ry at m juf e pung'cnt graing of titillatin duft Pope (LUATRON. 1, /. [titillation ench fitillatio, Lat. from titilla e.] LS Tr}ilek?& of tickling tickling capfech layghter; t e caufe may be t ] fli‘;hfl;ltgxoof the fpirits, and fo o the breatyh, by ( kil fim rml/arzon. Bacon : nfw ate of being tickled o l °:t54 the acid particles feem fo attenu i flWati;n 500l 40 produce a fmali an fu defon VouI Tr'TLARK . A bird Ti¥TMOUSE nobler enbe athamfad fequel that reac Glanwille The fmaller birds do the like in the r feafon as the leverock, titlark, and linnet Walton n. /. [titelle, old Fr, titulus, Lat. X general head comprifing particulars . Three draw the experiments of the forme {Hu into 1;'.‘.(: and tables for the better dra ing of obfervations; thefe we call compilers Bacon. Among the many preferences that the l ws o England have above others, I fhall fingle ou tw particular titles, which give a handfome fpeci e of their excellencies above other laws in other par or titles of the fame approved, unlefs they have fom clean.sh data import.tsv out README Jo Trrue. w. 2 The delights which refult from thef tertainments, our cool thoughts nee no ed of, and which are dogged by no f c as are the produé@s of thofe fitillati n no higher than the fenfes Tr'riE clean.sh data import.tsv out README 1 have fearched man by man, boy by boy; th Offenfive war 3+ Any flight or petty pleafure Shake/peare 2, The tenth part of any thing T Arbuthnot 2. A Hale appellation of honour To leave his wife, to leave his babes His manfion, and his rit/es in a plac From whence himfelf does fly clean.sh data import.tsv out README Shakefp. Macbeth Man over me He made not lord : fuch tit/e to himfel Referving Milton 3+ A name -Th an appellation My name's Macbeth devil himfelf could not pronounce a rit/ More hateful to mine ear Shakefpeare''s Macketh IIl worthy I fuch tit/e fhould belon To me tranfgrefior 4. Th firft pag of a book Milton telling it name, and generally its fubje& an in fcription chick or tit. n. f. [tijt, Dutch or fmall bird; #it/ingier Hland ick, a little bird : 7i¢ fignifies Jirtle i the T'eutonick diale¢t.} A fmall fpecie of birds The nightingale is fovereign of fon Before him fits the titmoufe filent by And I unfit to thruft in fkilful throng Should Colin make judge of my foolerie. Spenfer The titmoufe and the pecker's hungry brood And Progne with her bofom ftain'd in blood. Dry 7o T1'rTER. v. 7. [formed, I fuppofe, fro the found.] To laugh with reftraint to laugh without ‘much noife In flow'd at once #'gay embroider'd race And titt'ring pufh'd the pedants off the place, Pope TrTTER. 7 /. [from the verb. 1. A reftrained laugh 2. I know not what it fignifies in Tu/er From wheat go and rake out the ritters or tine If eare be not forth, it will rife again fine Ti'rrre n Tuffer [I fuppofe from siz. {mall particle ; a point a dot In the particular which concerned the church the Scots would never depart from a tittle. Clarend Angels themfelves difdainin T" approach thy temple, give thee in comman What to the fmalleft zizt/e thou fhalt fa To thy adorers Milton They thought God and themfelves linked togetherin fo faft a covenant, that, although they neve performed their part, God was yet bound to mak good every tittle of his Ned Fathio hat South bee bred abou court an "This man's brow, like to a ritle leaf Foretels the nature of a tragick volume Shakefp Our adverfaries encou a writer who canno furnifh out fo much as e page with propriety underftands to a tirz/e all the punétilios of a drawing-room Sawift You are not advanced one titt/e towards the proo of what yeu intend Waterland Saift Tr'rrLeTaTTLE. 7 /. [A word forme from zattle by aludicrous reduplication. Idle talk; prattle; empty gabble Others with wifhful eyes on glory look When they have got their piture towards a book Or pompous tit/e, like a gaudy fig Meant to betray dull fots to wretched wine, Young 5. A claim of right Let the title of a man's right be called in queftion; are we not bold to rely and build upon th Jjudgment of fuch as are famous for their {killin th laws Hooker Is a ma impoverithe by purchafe? it is be caufe he paid his money for a lye, and took a ba title for a good Scith *Tis our dut Such monuments, as we can build, to raife Left all the world prevent what we fhould do And claim a #itle in him by their praife Diyden If there were no laws to proteét them, ther were no living in this world for good men; and i effe¢ there woul be n laws if it were a fin i them to try a title, or right themfelves b th Kettleavorth To revenge their common injuries, though vo had an undoubted #¢/e by your birth, you had greater by your courage Dryden Conti'would have kept his ¢it/e to Orange. _4dd O the diferetion of a girl ! fhe will be a flave t any thing that has not a #it/e to make her one As the foe drew nea With love, and joy, and life and dear Our don, whc knew this tittletattl Did, fure as trumpet, call to battle Prior For every idle tittletattle that went about, Jac was {ufpected for the author Arbuthnot's Hiftory of Fobn Bull o TU'TTLETATTLE To prate idly . 2 [from zattle. You are full in your tittletattlings of Cupid : her is Cupid, and there is Cupid: I will tell you no what a good old woman told me Sidney Trrusa'rion. n. /. [titubo, Lat.] Th att of ftumbling Tr'rurar. adj. [titulaire, Fr. from titulus, Lat.] Nominal; having or conferring only the title They would deliver up t m to the kin of England te fhado t on, and to b titular and painted hcad of thofe arms Bacon's Henry V1 Southern 7o Tv'rLE T [from the noun. @. a Milton s and Auftin were zitzlar bifhop entitle ; to name ; to call X& ‘To thefe, that fober race of men, whofe live n. fo [from titular.] Th ing titular Religious titled them the fons of God Shall yield up all their virtue, all their fame Ignobly Milton's Paradife Lof T1TLELESS adj. [from zitle. name or appellation Wanting Not in ufe T1UTLEPAGE Shakefpeare's Corio'anus u. [title and page. page containing the title of a book W fhoul hav bee Th pleafed to have feen ou own names at the bottom of the titlepage mi fucceff 2 name o etai the ga He was a kind of nothing, ritlelefs Till he had forg'd himfelf a name o' th' fir Of burning Rome tus, an D Dryden Ti'rurary. adj tulns, Liat. [tiulaire, Fr Erretirs from # 1. Confifting in a title "T'he malecontents of his k'ngdom have not bee bale nor titalary impoftors, but of an highe Bacon's He natu |